“Why’d you figure you needed a gun?”
Runyon mustered patience, kept his face empty and his voice even. “I didn’t figure I’d need it. But I was a police officer in Seattle for a dozen years and I’ve been in enough bad situations not to take any chances. You know my background by now. You’ve got my license-you must’ve run a check on me.”
“We ran one,” Rinniak said. “Spotless record.”
“Yeah, spotless,” Kelso said.
“Don, for Christ’s sake, let me handle this, will you?” He gestured to Runyon to go on.
“I checked the hay barn first, then the big barn. No real cause to enter either one except that feeling. For all I knew somebody was hurt somewhere on the property. I was in the big barn when I heard a creaking sound. That’s what led me to the tack room and the dead man. I was on my way outside to call nine-eleven when I got clobbered.”
“Where do you suppose the assailant was all this time?”
“Hiding. Probably behind the stack of lumber. It was a board he hit me with, wasn’t it?”
“Two-by-two. You didn’t have any idea he was still there?”
“I should’ve figured he might be, but I didn’t. Window in the tack room was open and I made the wrong assumption.”
“You didn’t manage to catch a glimpse of him before he hit you?”
“Happened too quick.”
“Anything that might help identify him?”
“No. Too dark in the barn.” Runyon’s mouth was dry again. He drank from the half-full glass on the bedside table. “Can I ask you a question?”
“Go ahead.”
“The motive. Why string a man up like that, a hired hand? Why lure the family away to do it?”
“No ideas that make any sense. Silvera was a family man himself, quiet, steady, no trouble to anybody that we can find-least likely candidate for premeditated homicide you can imagine.”
“There isn’t any motive,” Kelso said. “Psycho firebugs don’t need reasons for what they do.”
Runyon said, “Firebug?”
“Three fires of suspicious origin in and around Gray’s Landing this summer,” Rinniak told him. “Junior high school, old Odd Fellows lodge building, abandoned barn. No fatalities or injuries, fortunately-all empty the nights they were torched. We’ve ruled out arson for gain in each case. And three’s too many in too short a time to be coincidence.”
“Firebugs don’t usually change their M.O. and start hanging people.”
“They do if they’re crazy enough,” Kelso said. “It’s none of your concern anyhow, Runyon.”
The throbbing ache in Runyon’s head said differently. But there was no gain in arguing with a man like Kelso; it would only make him more belligerent. He said to Rinniak, “If it’s all right with you, I’d like my license and my weapon back as soon as possible.”
“No problem. You can pick them up at the Gray’s Landing substation.”
“How about my car?”
“Still at the Belsize farm. When did the doctor say you could be released?”
“As soon as I talked to you.”
“Well, if it doesn’t take too long, I’ll wait and give you a ride down. You feel up to driving to your motel?”
“I can manage.”
“Better plan to spend the weekend. Rest up, keep available in case we need to talk to you again.”
“I was planning on it anyway. I still haven’t done the job I came here to do.”
Kelso laughed, a surprisingly effeminate sound from such a cowboy. “Deliver a subpoena to Jerry Belsize? I wouldn’t worry about that if I were you.”
“No?”
“No. Belsize won’t be testifying at any trial in San Francisco. He’ll be in jail awaiting trial himself once we find him. He’s the psycho who set those fires and strung up Manny Silvera.”
7
JAKE RUNYON
Jerry Belsize had been missing for more than twenty-four hours. Last seen at around 9:00 A.M. yesterday, in the company of the murdered hired man, Manuel Silvera. He’d left the farm shortly afterward, supposedly for his job at a feed mill in Orford, but he hadn’t shown up there or called in with an excuse. His parents had no idea why he’d skipped work or where he’d gone. He was supposed to have been back at the farm in time for supper; that was why the Belsizes had panicked when they got the anonymous phone call. Sandra Parnell claimed she hadn’t heard from him and had no idea where he might be. According to the victim’s wife, Silvera told her by phone that he’d be home late because he had “extra work and something else to do” at the Belsize farm. He hadn’t said what the something else was.
A search of the big barn had turned up two empty one-gallon kerosene cans hidden in the hayloft. And a search of Jerry Belsize’s room yielded all the components for the kind of simple timing device used in each of the three fires. Circumstantial evidence, but fairly damning just the same.
Runyon learned all of this on the drive down to Gray’s Landing. Unlike the deputy, Kelso, Joe Rinniak was an evenhanded man-forthcoming, and respectful of an ex-Seattle cop with Runyon’s credentials. He seemed to need to unload to an understanding ear.
The operating theory, the one Kelso subscribed to, was that Silvera had seen the kid setting one of the blazes and kept quiet about it because he didn’t want to get involved, or maybe for blackmail purposes. That was the alleged motive for the hanging-to make sure Silvera stayed silent. Why make his kill on his own home ground? He was a psychotic, not thinking rationally. Why disappear? Runyon showing up, almost catching him in the act, had panicked him and sent him on the run.
“We’ve got a BOLO out on him right now,” Rinniak said. “Kelso wanted a fugitive warrant, but I don’t think we have enough for that yet. Belsize doesn’t have any money to speak of and he’s not overly bright-where’s he going to go that he won’t be caught? Once we have him in custody and question him in detail, then we’ll see.”
“Sounds like you have your doubts about his guilt.”
“Doubts, yes.” He glanced sideways at Runyon. “You know much about pyromania?”
“Some. I handled a couple of firebug cases when I was on the Seattle PD. You’re convinced that’s the kind of case it is?”
“Where the fires are concerned, what else?”
“Could be a grudge thing. Somebody with a mad-on for the community.”
“That’s possible, I suppose,” Rinniak said, “but it doesn’t fit Jerry Belsize. No cause to torch the school or the Odd Fellows hall or the Adamson barn. Looks to me like they were random targets. That argues for the firebug explanation, only he doesn’t seem to fit there, either. You investigated him. What’s your opinion?”
That was the main reason Rinniak was being so candid; he wanted Runyon’s input. “On paper he doesn’t seem to fit the profile.”
“Except for the fact that he’s young. Most firebugs come from poor environments, broken or dysfunctional homes-adore their mothers, hate their fathers. Repressed loners with low intelligence, low self-esteem, emotional retardation, deep-seated sexual hang-ups. Setting fires is a substitute for the sex act, the shrinks say. Gets them excited, temporarily relieves the sexual tension. But it doesn’t last, so they keep on doing it.”
Runyon started to nod. The steady throb in his head changed his mind.
“Belsize had a normal upbringing, and seems to be anything but sexually repressed. He’s had a string of girlfriends ranging back to when he was about fourteen.”
Runyon said, “Not every bug is a textbook case. Some have other problems, other motives.”
“But you’d think that if Belsize was one of those, there’d be something in his background to hint at it. Sure, he’s had some brushes with authority, but it’s all been pretty minor stuff-two speeding tickets, a public scuffle, driving with an open beer in the car. He’s got a decent job; his employer likes him; he seems to fit into the community at large. So why would he all of a sudden go off on a crazy spree this summer-setting fires, committing homicide?”
“Simmering under the surface all along.”